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Site Home –› Recreation –› Story Telling
 

O'Connell Bridge, Dublin

 

O' Connell Bridge spans the River Liffey and joins the North Side and South Side of Dublin. O'Connell Bridge is unique in Europe as it is the only bridge that is wider than it is long. Today the bridge marks the very centre of Dublin as it joins O'Connell Street to D'Olier Street.

Originally the bridge was named the Carlisle Bridge after the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland at the time, Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle. The bridge was designed by James Gandon, a famous Irish architect whose name is associated with many of the great Georgian buildings in Dublin. The construction of the bridge took three years and was completed in 1794.

It wasn't until 1879 that more work took place on the bridge when it was decided that the bridge should be widened to allow greater traffic flow. The bridge was widened to the same width of Sackville Street, now O'Connell Street. The bridge was reopened in 1882 it was renamed in honour of Daniel O'Connell and a statue in his honour was erected.

O'Connell had been a famous lawyer who campaigned for the repeal of the Union between Ireland and the UK. He only used non-violent means and for this he has been remembered as a hero. He stands in stark contrast against the IRA and the UDF who used bloodshed to achieve nothing other than to tear apart a province with violence.

O'Connell Bridge isn't the only bridge so named, the second being the bridge that spans the pond in St Stephens Green. In 2004 a number of pranksters installed a plaque on O'Connell Bridge dedicated to Farther Pat Noise, a fictitious priest. The plaque remains on O'Connell Bridge to this day and wasn't noticed by the Dublin County Council until May 2006.

Author: Ronan Menton
 
Author Bio:

Ronan Menton

Ronan Menton is currently living in Dublin, Ireland, but calls Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia his second home. He is associated in the web travel business in Ireland. Among his hobbies are mountain walking, squash and golf. He is only new to the online article writing scene, but is really enjoying "this new dimension to the net."

 
 
 

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